Central African leaders tell of humanitarian crisis in Bangui

By Jonathan Luxmoo

Catholic News Service

12/11/2013

Men dig a trench Dec. 10 to be used as a bathroom for displaced residents camping outside a Catholic church in Bangui, Central African Republic. A church official said thousands of displaced civilians had taken refuge in Bangui's churches and parish bui ldings, creating drastic humanitarian needs. (CNS photo/Sam Phelps, Reuters)

OXFORD, England (CNS) -- Catholic leaders in the Central African Republic spoke of a humanitarian crisis and criticized attempts to fuel interreligious clashes in their nation.

"Most have nothing left to eat and are sleeping outside on the ground — we've nothing left to give them and our parishes can't cope," Msgr. Doumalo said.

"All the roads are completely blocked, and it's too dangerous to go outside, so we're not receiving any supplies. Since atrocities are still taking place in the city suburbs, more people are arriving in search of shelter."

He said French forces that arrived in Bangui Dec. 8 were gradually restoring order, although people were "deeply afraid of acts of revenge against the groups being disarmed. But Christian and Muslim leaders have urged their communities to remain calm and avoid branding people according to their religion.

"Christians, Muslims and animists are engaged on both sides — it's completely wrong to view this as a religious conflict," he told CNS.

Under a U.N. mandate, a contingent of 1,600 French paratroopers began disarming militants from the rebel Seleka movement, after several days of communal fighting left at least 400 dead, many of them children.

France's Catholic La Croix daily reported Dec. 10 the French army appeared to have "underestimated the determination" of Seleka fighters, composed partly of Arab-speaking Islamists from neighboring Chad and Sudan. The rebels suspended the constitution after ousting President Francois Bozize in March.

The newspaper said there were fears of revenge attacks on suspected Seleka sympathizers by members of a pro-Bozize militia, Anti-Balaka, formed in September in Bozize's northwestern home region. It also said residents feared if they welcomed French intervention, they would be subject to revenge attacks by Seleka remnants.

Salesians based in Bangui spoke of similar fears and reported that, with an increase in violence in early December, they were sheltering more than 20,000 people in two centers.

Father Jose Maria Saba, treasurer of the Salesian province of Equatorial Tropical Africa, wrote confreres in the United States and expressed concern that there was no one to protect the people at the two centers. He said the Salesians would appeal to the international Catholic charity network, Caritas Internationalis, as soon as he could ascertain exactly what was needed.

In a Dec. 7 message, Archbishop Dieudonne Nzapalainga of Bangui, the bishops' conference president, said the current crisis had caused "chaos and barbarism," adding that church leaders deplored outrages by both Anti-Balaka and Seleka.

However, it was wrong to suggest the two rival groups had a Christian or a Muslim character, Archbishop Nzapalainga said, adding that he condemned recent rival attacks on mosques and churches in Bangui.

"We condemn every attempt at political recovery which aims at antagonizing Central Africans and setting them against each other under the pretext of religious affiliations," the archbishop said in the message, co-signed by Bishop Nestor Nongo Aziagbia of Bossangoa, the conference's vice president.

"We forcefully reaffirm that interreligious violence and conflict contradict what we profess in our faith. We are all created in the image and likeness of God and destined for eternal salvation," he said.

Msgr. Doumalo told CNS that Archbishop Nzapalainga had inspected parts of the city Dec. 11 and offered to shelter Muslim refugees in his residence.

However, he added that many residents were still afraid to return home, and said the church's Caritas charity was now over-stretched by humanitarian needs.

"Many have lost everything, and the list of dead is still mounting here, so the church will need a lot of time to sensitize people to the requirements of peace and concord," the bishops' conference secretary-general said.

"We are still in a state of deep shock, and we need the conflict to end so we can begin counseling people to reorganize and resist the temptation of violence."

Catholics make up around a third of the 4.4 million inhabitants of the Central African Republic, one of the world's poorest countries; Muslims are about a tenth.

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